Current Content
Use this section instead of FAR 44.305-2(c) and 44.305-3(b).
(a) The cognizant contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing system analyst or auditor, shall—
(1) Determine the acceptability of the contractor’s purchasing system and approve or disapprove the system; and
(2) Pursue correction of any deficiencies.
(b) In evaluating the acceptability of the contractor’s purchasing system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing system analyst or auditor, shall determine whether the contractor’s purchasing system complies with the system criteria for an acceptable purchasing system as prescribed in the clause at 252.244-7001 , Contractor Purchasing System Administration.
(c) Disposition of findings—
(1) Reporting of findings. The purchasing system analyst or auditor shall document findings and recommendations in a report to the contracting officer. If the auditor or purchasing system analyst identifies any material weaknesses, the report shall describe the underlying deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow the contracting officer to understand the weaknesses ordeficiencies.
(2) Initial determination.
(i) The contracting officer shall review all findings and recommendations and, if there are no material weaknesses, shall promptly notify the contractor that the contractor's purchasing system is acceptable and approved; or
(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more material weaknesses due to the contractor’s failure to meet one or more of the purchasing system criteria in the clause at 252.244-7001, the contracting officer shall—
(A) Promptly make an initial written determination on any material weaknessesand notify the contractor, in writing, providing a description of each material weakness in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand the weakness (see PGI 244.305-70(c)(2));
(B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial determination within 30 days; and
(C) Evaluate the contractor's response to the initial determination in consultation with the auditor or purchasing system analyst, and make a final determination.
(3) Final determination.
(i) The contracting officer shall make a final determination and notify the contractor, in writing, that—
(A) The contractor’s purchasing system is acceptable and approved, and no material weaknesses remain; or
(B) Material weaknesses remain. The notice shall identify any remaining material weaknesses and indicate the adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action. The contracting officer shall—
(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct the weaknesses or submit an acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the weaknesses;
(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 252.244-7001; and
(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 252.242-7005 , Contractor Business Systems, if the clause is included in the contract.
(ii) Follow the procedures relating to monitoring a contractor’s corrective action and the correction of material weaknesses in PGI 244.305-70 (c)(3).
(d) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve a previously disapproved purchasing system and notify the contractor when the contracting officer determines that there are no remaining material weaknesses.
(e) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the auditor; payment office; affected contracting officers at the buying activities; and cognizant contracting officers in contract administration activities.
(f) Mitigating the risk of deficiencies on specific proposals.
(1) Source selection evaluation teams shall discuss identified deficiencies and their impact in all reports on contractor proposals until the deficiencies are resolved.
(2) The contracting officer responsible for negotiation of a proposal generated by a purchasing system with an identified deficiency shall evaluate whether the deficiency impacts the negotiations. If it does not, the contracting officer should proceed with negotiations. If it does, the contracting officer should consider other alternatives, e.g.—
(i) Allowing the contractor additional time to correct the deficiency and submit a corrected proposal;
(ii) Considering another type of contract, e.g., a fixed-price incentive (firm target) contract instead of firm-fixed-price;
(iii) Using additional cost analysis techniques to determine the reasonableness of the cost elements affected by the deficiency;
(iv) Segregating the questionable areas as a cost-reimbursable line item;
(v) Reducing the negotiation objective for profit or fee; or
(vi) Including a contract (reopener) clause that provides for adjustment of the contract amount after award.
(3) The contracting officer who incorporates a reopener clause into the contract is responsible for negotiating price adjustments required by the clause. Any reopener clause necessitated by a deficiency should—
(i) Clearly identify the amounts and items that are in question at the time of negotiation;
(ii) Indicate a specific time or subsequent event by which the contractor will submit a supplemental proposal, including certified cost or pricing data, identifying the cost impact adjustment necessitated by the deficient purchasing system;
(iii) Provide for the contracting officer to adjust the contract price unilaterally if the contractor fails to submit the supplemental proposal; and
(iv) Provide that failure of the Government and the contractor to agree to the price adjustment shall be a dispute under the Disputes clause.
Change History
| Detected | Type | Summary |
|---|---|---|
| detected 2026-04-17 | PGI_MODIFIED | PGI 244.305-70 updated: 32 lines added, 8 lines removed |
View diff--- previous +++ current @@ -1,8 +1,32 @@ -(c) Disposition of findings. -(2) Initial determination. (ii)(A) Within 30 days of receiving the report, if the contracting officer makes a determination that there is a material weakness, the contracting officer should provide an initial determination of material weaknesses and a copy of the report to the contractor and require the contractor to submit a written response. (C) Evaluation of contractor's response. Within 30 days of receiving the contractor's response, the contracting officer, in consultation with the auditor or cognizant functional specialist, should evaluate the contractor's response and make a final determination. -(3) Final - -determination. (ii)(A) Monitoring contractors' corrective action. The contracting officer and Purchasing System Analyst (PSA) or auditor shall monitor the contractor's progress in correcting material weaknesses and deficiencies. If the contractor fails to make adequate progress, the contracting officer shall take whatever action is necessary to ensure that the contractor corrects the weaknesses and deficiencies. Actions the contracting officer may take include: withdrawing or withholding approval of the system; bringing the issue to the attention of higher level management; recommending non-award of potential contracts, as applicable; and for material weaknesses, implementing or increasing the withholding in accordance with 252.242-7005, Contractor Business Systems. (B) Correction of material weaknesses. -(1) When the contractor notifies the contracting officer that the contractor has corrected the material weaknesses, the contracting officer shall request the PSA or auditor to review the correction to determine if the weaknesses and deficiencies have been resolved. -(2) The contracting officer shall determine if the contractor has corrected the weaknesses and deficiencies. -(3) If the contracting officer determines the contractor has corrected the deficiencies, the contracting officer's notification shall be sent to the PSA; auditor; payment office; appropriate action officers responsible for reporting past performance at the requiring activities; and each contracting and contract administration office having substantial business with the contractor as applicable.+Use this section instead of FAR 44.305-2(c) and 44.305-3(b). +(a) The cognizant contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing system analyst or auditor, shall-- +(1) Determine the acceptability of the contractor's purchasing system and approve or disapprove the system; and +(2) Pursue correction of any deficiencies. +(b) In evaluating the acceptability of the contractor's purchasing system, the contracting officer, in consultation with the purchasing system analyst or auditor, shall determine whether the contractor's purchasing system complies with the system criteria for an acceptable purchasing system as prescribed in the clause at 252.244-7001, Contractor Purchasing System Administration. +(c) Disposition of findings-- +(1) Reporting of findings. The purchasing system analyst or auditor shall document findings and recommendations in a report to the contracting officer. If the auditor or purchasing system analyst identifies any material weaknesses, the report shall describe the underlying deficiencies in sufficient detail to allow the contracting officer to understand the weaknesses ordeficiencies. +(2) Initial determination. +(i) The contracting officer shall review all findings and recommendations and, if there are no material weaknesses, shall promptly notify the contractor that the contractor's purchasing system is acceptable and approved; or +(ii) If the contracting officer finds that there are one or more material weaknesses due to the contractor's failure to meet one or more of the purchasing system criteria in the clause at 252.244-7001, the contracting officer shall-- (A) Promptly make an initial written determination on any material weaknessesand notify the contractor, in writing, providing a description of each material weakness in sufficient detail to allow the contractor to understand the weakness (see PGI 244.305-70(c)(2)); (B) Request the contractor to respond, in writing, to the initial determination within 30 days; and (C) Evaluate the contractor's response to the initial determination in consultation with the auditor or purchasing system analyst, and make a final determination. +(3) Final determination. +(i) The contracting officer shall make a final determination and notify the contractor, in writing, that-- (A) The contractor's purchasing system is acceptable and approved, and no material weaknesses remain; or (B) Material weaknesses remain. The notice shall identify any remaining material weaknesses and indicate the adequacy of any proposed or completed corrective action. The contracting officer shall-- +(1) Request that the contractor, within 45 days of receipt of the final determination, either correct the weaknesses or submit an acceptable corrective action plan showing milestones and actions to eliminate the weaknesses; +(2) Disapprove the system in accordance with the clause at 252.244-7001; and +(3) Withhold payments in accordance with the clause at 252.242-7005, Contractor Business Systems, if the clause is included in the contract. +(ii) Follow the procedures relating to monitoring a contractor's corrective action and the correction of material weaknesses in PGI 244.305-70 (c)(3). +(d) System approval. The contracting officer shall promptly approve a previously disapproved purchasing system and notify the contractor when the contracting officer determines that there are no remaining material weaknesses. +(e) Contracting officer notifications. The cognizant contracting officer shall promptly distribute copies of a determination to approve a system, disapprove a system and withhold payments, or approve a previously disapproved system and release withheld payments to the auditor; payment office; affected contracting officers at the buying activities; and cognizant contracting officers in contract administration activities. +(f) Mitigating the risk of deficiencies on specific proposals. +(1) Source selection evaluation teams shall discuss identified deficiencies and their impact in all reports on contractor proposals until the deficiencies are resolved. +(2) The contracting officer responsible for negotiation of a proposal generated by a purchasing system with an identified deficiency shall evaluate whether the deficiency impacts the negotiations. If it does not, the contracting officer should proceed with negotiations. If it does, the contracting officer should consider other alternatives, e.g.-- +(i) Allowing the contractor additional time to correct the deficiency and submit a corrected proposal; +(ii) Considering another type of contract, e.g., a fixed-price incentive (firm target) contract instead of firm-fixed-price; +(iii) Using additional cost analysis techniques to determine the reasonableness of the cost elements affected by the deficiency; +(iv) Segregating the questionable areas as a cost-reimbursable line item; +(v) Reducing the negotiation objective for profit or fee; or +(vi) Including a contract (reopener) clause that provides for adjustment of the contract amount after award. +(3) The contracting officer who incorporates a reopener clause into the contract is responsible for negotiating price adjustments required by the clause. Any reopener clause necessitated by a deficiency should-- +(i) Clearly identify the amounts and items that are in question at the time of negotiation; +(ii) Indicate a specific time or subsequent event by which the contractor will submit a supplemental proposal, including certified cost or pricing data, identifying the cost impact adjustment necessitated by the deficient purchasing system; +(iii) Provide for the contracting officer to adjust the contract price unilaterally if the contractor fails to submit the supplemental proposal; and +(iv) Provide that failure of the Government and the contractor to agree to the price adjustment shall be a dispute under the Disputes clause. |
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